Santa Fe New Mexican

Hillary makes history

Democrats make Clinton first woman nominated for president by major party

- By Patrick Healy and Jonathan Martin

The Democratic convention formally nominated Hillary Clinton for president Tuesday, making history by choosing a woman to be the first standard-bearer of a major political party, a breakthrou­gh underscore­d by a deeply personal speech by Bill Clinton calling her “the best darn change-maker I have ever known.”

At 6:39 p.m. Eastern time, the hall erupted in cheers and joyful tears as South Dakota cast the decisive 15 votes to put Hillary Clinton over the threshold of 2,382 delegates required to clinch the nomination.

A sea of delegates waved multicolor­ed signs with Clinton’s “H” campaign logo, while others fell into hugs and several women jumped up and down with elation.

Vince Insalaco, the chairman of the Democratic Party of Arkansas, where the Clintons built their public profile over two decades, said the choice of the first female presidenti­al nominee was a historic moment.

“I’m so proud to be a Democrat tonight,” Insalaco said, “and so proud

that we can call this woman one of our own.”

Clinton’s primary rival, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, played a symbolic role in hopes of unifying the party behind her. After Vermont arranged to go last in the roll call, Sanders joined its delegation to roars of “Bernie, Bernie” and called on the party to rally behind Clinton.

But it was the appearance of Bill Clinton, shortly after 10 p.m., that stirred the crowd most, as he set out to share a more personal side of the sometimes-reserved former secretary of state.

Unspooling memories of their 45 years together, Clinton used warm and detailed anecdotes to argue that the couple’s political enemies had spent decades creating a “cartoon” of his wife that he was now determined to puncture. Hillary Clinton is among the most unpopular presidenti­al nominees in modern history, and the former president appealed to the audience to see through the political attacks on her.

“One is real,” Bill Clinton said of the divergent portrayals of his wife, “the other is made up.” He recalled the affection of Hillary Clinton’s old friends, her empathy for those in need, and the praise she had won from Republican­s as a senator and as secretary of state.

“You nominated the real one,” Bill Clinton said to a long burst of applause. Seeming to realize that he had been speaking for 38 minutes, he added in classicall­y loquacious Bill Clinton fashion, “We have to get back on schedule.”

Bill Clinton’s testimony was so personal that he even appeared to obliquely invoke problems in the couple’s marriage.

“She’ll never quit on you,” he said. “She never quit on me.”

Bill Clinton’s task was clear: to humanize his wife but also energize Democrats by flattering those in the hall and villainizi­ng Donald Trump, the Republican nominee.

“She never made fun of people with disabiliti­es,” Clinton said, referring to Trump’s mocking of a disabled reporter last year. “She tried to empower them based on their abilities.”

Yet as Clinton recounted his wife’s well-chronicled profession­al accomplish­ments, he also tried to paint a portrait of a mother who is not as well known. Recounting the day they moved their daughter, Chelsea, into her freshman dorm at Stanford University, Bill Clinton recounted how Hillary Clinton kept looking for “one more drawer to put that liner paper in,” reluctant to say goodbye to her only child.

The speech was extraordin­ary in its intimacy and in Bill Clinton’s willingnes­s to use their much-scrutinize­d marriage as a testament to her character. He began by recalling how he first met his future wife in 1971 at Yale Law School — he so nervous, she full of confidence — and spent almost 15 minutes describing courting her and proposing marriage three times before she said yes. At one point, trying to play a mind game, Bill Clinton told her that she should move to Illinois or New York and run for office rather than marry him and have other young Democrats eclipse her.

“They mean well, and they speak well, but none of them are as good as you are,” Bill Clinton told her about their political generation. “She said: ‘Are you out of your mind? Nobody would ever vote for me.’ ”

The convention underwent a notable shift as the evening went on: Sanders was barely mentioned, a deliberate decision by the Clinton campaign officials who organized the lineup of speakers. Advisers said that, with Hillary Clinton now the nominee, they wanted to focus on her character and political record, and on taking the fight to Trump, rather than continuing to nod to Sanders and his primary fight.

The crowd was subdued for much of the evening, but in the most searing part, nine African-American mothers whose children were killed by gun violence or in encounters with the police took the stage to chants of “Black lives matter.” The women, who have been campaignin­g for Clinton for months, described how she had sat with them privately to hear their stories and worked with them to promote gun control measures.

One of the mothers, Lucia McBath — whose 17-year-old son, Jordan Davis, was fatally shot after playing loud music in his car in 2012 — said Clinton “isn’t afraid to say black lives matter,” a phrase Trump and other Republican­s have derided by saying that all lives matter. But McBath also said Clinton knew that Americans needed to come together to keep children safe.

“We’re going to keep building a future where police officers and communitie­s of color work together in mutual respect,” she said.

Convention organizers, apparently seeking a balance with the mothers, invited the Pittsburgh police chief, Cameron McLay, to speak earlier in the evening. But as McLay spoke of fallen officers and called for a criminal justice overhaul, many in the hall carried on their conversati­ons.

Democrats used Tuesday to appeal to some of their traditiona­l constituen­cies, but they also highlighte­d Clinton’s faith. A video was played in which she asked for a prayer and then joined a prayer circle, and an image on one of the screens for part of the evening showed a group of people laying hands on her.

It was a striking, and surely not accidental, contrast to the Republican convention last week, in which appeals to the faithful were somewhat muted and Trump scarcely mentioned faith in his acceptance speech.

Later, as the convention wound down after 9 p.m., black and white images of every previous president flashed on the screen, which finally seemed to crack as a smiling Hillary Clinton suddenly appeared by video connection.

The hall broke out in applause and shouts of excitement as Clinton acknowledg­ed breaking the glass ceiling.

“If there are any little girls out there who stayed up late to watch,” she said, “let me just say, I may become the first woman president, but one of you is next.”

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? From left, Carrie Pugh, Katrina Mendiola and Mayors Wegmann cry Tuesday as Hillary Clinton officially becomes the first woman to be the presidenti­al nominee of a major U.S. political party during the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia.
JOHN LOCHER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS From left, Carrie Pugh, Katrina Mendiola and Mayors Wegmann cry Tuesday as Hillary Clinton officially becomes the first woman to be the presidenti­al nominee of a major U.S. political party during the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia.
 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton appears on a monitor Tuesday to thank delegates during the Democratic National Convention.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton appears on a monitor Tuesday to thank delegates during the Democratic National Convention.

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